Description |
x, 374 pages ; 24 cm |
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regular print |
Series |
A UNSW Press book |
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UNSW Press book.
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Contents |
1. Seeing is believing : Victorians and insanity -- 2. 'I can speak if the listener will be patient' : listening to the shell-shocked -- 3. 'Do I really get better by just talking?' : the auditory self in the age of modernity -- 4. Psychoanalysis and intellectuals -- 5. Dreams -- 6. Shaping the child -- 7. 'The war of specialists' -- 8. 'Europe's loss is Australia's gain' : the advent of institutes of psychoanalysis in Australia, 1940s and 1950s -- 9. War, Freud and art -- 10. The self and society : 1950s and 1960s -- 11. In and out of the asylums -- 12. The politics of the self and consciousness raising : women's liberation and Freud -- 13. Recent psychoanalytic thought and practice -- Conclusion : listening in the age of drugs |
Summary |
"Freud in the Antipodes discusses the impact of Freud on the medical profession before looking more widely, finding that Freudian ideas have permeated intellectual circles as well." "By linking psychoanalysis with modernity, the book is, in effect, an alternative history of twentieth-century Australia. Joy Damousi considers the changes that increasingly sophisticated drugs have wrought on talking and listening therapies, and asks what the place of psychoanalysis might be in the twenty-first century."--BOOK JACKET |
Analysis |
Psychoanalysis (Australia) |
Notes |
Includes index |
Bibliography |
Bibliography, pages [337]-368 |
Notes |
Also available online via the World Wide Web, by subscription to EBL Ebook Library |
Subject |
Freud, Sigmund, 1856-1939.
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Psychoanalysis.
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Psychoanalysis -- Australia -- History -- 20th century.
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ISBN |
0868408883 |
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